4.5 Article

Scanpath modeling and classification with hidden Markov models

Journal

BEHAVIOR RESEARCH METHODS
Volume 50, Issue 1, Pages 362-379

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13428-017-0876-8

Keywords

Scanpath; Eye movements; Hidden Markov models; Classification; Machine-learning; Toolbox

Funding

  1. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/I017909/1]
  2. Research Grant Council of Hong Kong [CityU 110513, 17402814]
  3. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/I017909/1]
  4. Research Grant Council of Hong Kong [CityU 110513, 17402814]

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How people look at visual information reveals fundamental information about them; their interests and their states of mind. Previous studies showed that scanpath, i.e., the sequence of eye movements made by an observer exploring a visual stimulus, can be used to infer observer-related (e.g., task at hand) and stimuli-related (e.g., image semantic category) information. However, eye movements are complex signals and many of these studies rely on limited gaze descriptors and bespoke datasets. Here, we provide a turnkey method for scanpath modeling and classification. This method relies on variational hidden Markov models (HMMs) and discriminant analysis (DA). HMMs encapsulate the dynamic and individualistic dimensions of gaze behavior, allowing DA to capture systematic patterns diagnostic of a given class of observers and/or stimuli. We test our approach on two very different datasets. Firstly, we use fixations recorded while viewing 800 static natural scene images, and infer an observer-related characteristic: the task at hand. We achieve an average of 55.9% correct classification rate (chance = 33%). We show that correct classification rates positively correlate with the number of salient regions present in the stimuli. Secondly, we use eye positions recorded while viewing 15 conversational videos, and infer a stimulus-related characteristic: the presence or absence of original soundtrack. We achieve an average 81.2% correct classification rate (chance = 50%). HMMs allow to integrate bottom-up, top-down, and oculomotor influences into a single model of gaze behavior. This synergistic approach between behavior and machine learning will open new avenues for simple quantification of gazing behavior. We release SMAC with HMM, a Matlab toolbox freely available to the community under an open-source license agreement.

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